Monday, November 29, 2010

A few thoughts on a cold day

Minus seventeen degrees is cold. Very cold. It was the coldest night for a hundred years I’m told. It wasn’t quite that cold here. That was a couple of hundred miles away in Wales. But it wasn’t far off. What makes it different, is that it’s hardly winter yet. It’s only November.


Something else happened here that doesn’t normally happen in November. Snow. It snowed heavily here on the south coast two days ago; in fact I had trouble identifying my car when I walked out my front door that morning. Three days later the pavement outside my house is still buried under the white stuff. The thing is, it’s been below freezing day and night for ages so it just sits there, frozen and very slippery. Funny that, because it wouldn’t take much for the local authority to clear it away. After all, it’s a hazard. I live in a hilly bit of town. It’s not too bad shuffling along on the flat, but trying to keep upright going up or down would challenge an Olympic skater!

Local authorities are, after all, responsible for health and safety. The Health and Safety Department are normally vigilant to the extreme. The other day I heard about a school which is planning to put on a performance of Jack and the Beanstalk this Christmas. The Health and Safety Department have told them that the little boy playing Jack has to use a small stepladder to climb the beanstalk rather than clamber six feet up the wooden leaves. Not only that, but he has to be tethered with a safety strap and don a crash helmet! There is a lovely pebble beach here in Sussex, where visitors are warned with a hideous bright yellow sign and a pictogram of a man falling over that there is an "uneven surface". Another pictogram, complete with another tumbling idiot, warns that the beach may have a "slippery surface". Yet there are old folk on the streets of the same town slithering and sliding on packed snow and ending up in the already overstretched A&E Department!

Instead of clearing the snow, the town council workers have been busy during the last few days attaching plastic Christmas trees to the lamp posts in my part of town. They look very festive. Just a shame about the hideous solar panel which sits atop each tree! I suppose I shouldn’t complain. They are after all doing their bit to conserve energy and help combat global warming.

Which brings me full circle to where I started. A couple of days ago we endured the coldest night for a hundred years, and it’s snowing two months earlier than usual. Clearly our efforts to combat global warming are having a profound effect!



Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Tallest, fastest, biggest, noisiest!



I'm not a great one for heights. I get giddy climbing up a kerb! So when I entered the lift which was to take me at great speed to the top of the world’s tallest building I did so with some trepidation!

For the last ten days or so I’ve been with my son Tim, daughter in law Alice and my grandchildren Oliver and Ella at their home in Dubai. During my last visit, the Burj Khalifa was nearing completion but now it stands tall and proud, dwarfing the towers that surround it. On my journey skyward, I apparently shot through a boutique hotel and some of the most desirable residences on the planet. In no time at all I found myself standing over 800 metres from terra firma looking down at skyscrapers and ant-like people below. And guess what, I forgot I didn’t like heights!

click on photo to enlarge 


The Burj Khalifa is in Downtown Dubai adjacent to the magnificent Dubai Mall. Flagship stores from the world’s most celebrated designers sit side by side with a gold souk and some of the best known high street brands. The mall floor is covered in lush carpeting and thousands of white silk butterflies hang in the air above plush leather sofas.


 It also features an enormous aquarium and a spectacular waterfall.







At the foot of the tower sits a lake with the most amazing fountains which perform carefully choreographed water dances each half hour to ethnic, pop and classical music, pumped from massive speakers.
Regular readers will know that I’m pretty keen on going to the races! Well, I went to the races in Dubai last week! It’s all very different there! For a start you can’t place a bet! The stadium is very new and features one of the most high tec big screen information display imaginable. At least I didn’t lose my shirt this time! We also hob-knobbed with the stars – much of the cast and crew of the new Mission Impossible movie were there rubbing shoulders with us!




Tim and I also went to pub quiz one night at the golf club. Suddenly I felt as I was back home again! The bar would put most of the pubs I know to shame although beer at almost double the UK price was a bit sobering!
We did lots of other things to including going to a child's birthday party where the main attraction for the little guests was charging across the ocean on a speedboat and riding an inflatable banana! 

The main reason for choosing this particular time to visit was so that Tim and I could attend three days of Motor racing at the Yas Marina circuit down the road in Abu Dhabi which culminated in the last race in the Formula One Grand Prix season. Whilst there we also spent a morning at the brand new and utterly spectacular Ferrari World  which mixes high speed thrills with interesting facts about this iconic brand in a truly original way. Having earlier in the week braved scaling new heights, I passed up the chance of riding the words fastest roller coaster that propels its terrified passengers from zero to 280 kph in a matter of a few seconds! Another reason for giving it a miss was as a result of a story told to us by someone who works there. It seems that when it was given its final test a few days earlier using crash-test dummies as passengers, one of the hapless manikins head flew off its shoulders with the force of the acceleration!




Tim got us the best seats in the house for the Grand Prix. We were close to the front of the main grandstand right by the start/finish and opposite the pit lane. The photo below is the 'end of term' picture of all the drivers just before they set off for the last time this year.

click on photos to enlarge









We also had a spectacular view of the prize giving ceremony where German Sebastian Vettel became the youngest ever world champion beating Brits Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button to the chequered flag.


At the end of each of the three days at the circuit, we attended a concert in the Arena. The first night was not my cup of tea at all. We were ‘entertained‘ by someone who had until then had passed me by. I’m sure his name will be familiar to my stateside friends, erm...now I’ve forgotten! A quick look in the programme tells me it was Kayne West! The following night we were screamed at by a rock band with another name which was unfamiliar to me, Linken Park! They were a vast improvement over night one, but the main attraction for me and the other 29,999 people who crammed into the arena on the final night was Prince! The whole concert was awesome.



We started off fairly near the front and by the end of the evening we’d managed to get right to the front!






It was the perfect end to a perfect holiday thanks to my wonderful Family who are such perfect hosts!




All photos can be clicked on to enlarge. As soon as I've sorted through the hundreds of photos I took during my stay I'll be publishing them on Keiths Images.